Translate

Monday, January 20, 2014

Question of the week: How to engage "high-achieving" students in math?

I expect this week that I will be teaching a math lesson which will be observed by my field mentor.

The standard procedure in my 5th grade math class is:
1.  Whole class direct instruction using provided curriculum
2.  Small groups are called up one by one to work with the teacher, and the other students work on assigned problems from the book.
3.  Those who finish early can use a computer to play online math games or can find a partner and play a paper math game.  The first 6 who finish are allowed to work in the shared space outside the classroom.

The same six always finish first. There are students who work hard and sometimes finish early, but never get to go to the shared space.   The computers are slow to connect to the network, and aren't reliably charged... etc.  There are a lot of reasons why I think this system is inefficient and unfair.

But what do you do with the kids who do finish first?  How do you motivate everyone to work hard, and not reward only those who finish first?  How do you keep the class humming, but ensure that it doesn't get too loud to disrupt the small groups, and those still doing independent work?

That is my question of the week.

Right now my thoughts are towards finding ways for them to work with other students, pushing the ZPD.  Or, pushing them to examine the math concept from multiple perspectives, as we do in math class, and also discussed here.